G-8 Leaders Juggle Eurozone Crises at Camp David

(The Blaze/AP) -- President Barack Obama and the leaders of other wealthy nations underscored an increasing consensus that their countries need to adopt growth measures and relentless budget cutbacks in order to resolve their debt troubles during the G-8 Summit, and underscored their desire to keep Greece on the Euro, even as the country battles financial crisis.

It's a juggle that's much harder in real life than it is on paper.

Their eight-paragraph statement from the presidential retreat at Camp David, Md., on Saturday bridged both sides of the austerity versus growth debate and let each decide exactly what the new growth emphasis is going to mean, though it said little about where the money for more spending might come from.

Their agreement - reached quickly after a morning's discussion at Camp David - bridged disagreement by not rejecting one approach in favor of the other, but rather by combining them. Balance budgets, yes, but find ways to spend, or rather "invest," on things like education and public works, too.

The statement clearly reflected Obama's wish for Europeans to go beyond the austerity approach championed by Germany. Obama's stance appears to show concern that a deep European recession or financial implosion from Greece leaving the euro could hurt the U.S. economy and complicate his already difficult re-election bid.

According to the Guardian: "After three years of facing European leaders committed to deficit reduction, Obama has a new ally in Hollande. Speaking at Camp David, Hollande said European leaders were trying to balance the competing aims of reining in their budgets while stimulating their economies: 'As President Obama noted, we need to pursue these two goals simultaneously: budgetary solvency and maximum growth.'"

In particular, the G-8 statement blesses some things that eurozone leaders are likely already doing, such as letting some indebted countries like Spain and Italy move a bit more slowly to close their large budget deficits. Countries need "sustainable" efforts to fix their finances, meaning they can "take into account countries' evolving economic conditions."

That could mean slower cuts. Spain, a recent focus of the crisis along with Greece, has sunk into recession and seen unemployment jump to 24 percent, 51 percent for people under 25. Spain is supposed to cut its deficit to the 3 percent EU limit next year, even though the European Commission itself predicts the deficit will come in at twice that. Economists predict that the EU may give them and others more time.

Yet Europe's chief apostle of austerity, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, gave up very little. She said that she was open to investment in things that would boost growth over the long term, but made it clear that didn't mean "stimulus," a word that, like "spending" does not appear in the document.

"This is not about stimulus programs in the usual sense, the way we applied them after the crisis," she said. "What's needed much more than that are investments in research and infrastructure, for instance in Europe in digital networks."

She conceded she was "open" to more use of Europe's EIB development bank and unspent EU infrastructure funds to help tiny, bankrupt Greece, now in the fifth year of a profound recession, but insisted Greece's promises to cut back in return for bailout loans must be strictly observed. The country has no elected government right now and faces new elections June 17; an indecisive election May 6 showed a majority against the austerity measures demanded under the bailouts. Greek rejection of those terms could lead already exasperated eurozone leaders to cut off more bailout payments. That would leave the country unable to pay its bills, a step that could mean an even more savage recession and reintroduction of a devalued drachma in an effort to gain international competitiveness.

Money for investment could come from "a range of mechanisms," it said, without specifics.

The ugly truth is that there isn't a lot of money available to spend in many countries. Failure to keep reducing deficits could mean Spain and Italy would be viewed as bad risks and could no longer borrow affordably, leading to defaults that would dwarf Greece's troubles.